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Jacek Niemiec Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, USA

Monte Carlo Simulations of the I-order Fermi acceleration processes at ultrareletivistic shock waves. Jacek Niemiec Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, USA Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN, Krak ów, Poland.

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Jacek Niemiec Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, USA

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  1. Monte Carlo Simulations of the I-order Fermi acceleration processes at ultrareletivistic shock waves Jacek Niemiec Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, USA Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN, Kraków, Poland J. Niemiec & M. Ostrowski (2005), ApJ submitted (astro-ph/0510811) J. Niemiec & M. Ostrowski (2006), in preparation

  2. Relativistic shocks in astrophysical objects Relativistic plasma flows observed in: • jets in AGN • jets in microquasars • GRB sources • pulsar winds shock waves – natural consequence of relativistic flows synchrotron radiation and/or g rays observed presence of energetic particles (particle acceleration) CygA, hot spots (X-rays)

  3. First-order Fermi process diffusion - elastic scattering off static irregularieties of the magnetic field energygains diffusive escape power-law particle spectrum

  4. First-order Fermi processNonrelativistic shocks (test particle approach, superthermal particles) (N(E) ~ E-s ) • particle distribution function isotropic: (s = a -2) compression ratio high Mach numbers: R = 4 and a = 4 (s=2) • particle spectrum independent ofconditions near the shock • y1, dB(k), F(k)

  5. First-order Fermi processRelativistic shocks 2 1 or particle anisotropy at shock: uB,1 < csubluminal uB,1 > c superluminal • acceleration processes very sensitive to the background conditions • and details of particle-wave interactions, which are poorly known

  6. Test particle results • parallel shocks (y1=0o): • ▫ semianalytic solutions of Fokker-Planck diffusion equation • Kirk & Schneider (1987a), Heavens & Drury (1988) • ▫ Monte Carlo simulations • Kirk & Schneider (1987b), Ellison, Jones, & Reynolds (1990) • spectral index differs from NR value a = 4 and depends on the wave power spectrum of magnetic field perturbations F(k) • oblique shocks (y1≠0o): • ▫ semianalytic method:weakly perturbed field dB/B « 1,k ≈ 0, subluminal shocks • Kirk & Heavens (1989) • flat spectra (a≈3) due to particle reflections from the compressed downstream field • ▫ Monte Carlo simulations: finite-amplitude perturbations, k≠ 0 • Ostrowski (1991,93), Ballard & Heavens (1992); Naito & Takahara (1995), • Bednarz & Ostrowski (1996, 98) • power-law spectra for superluminal shocks in conditions of highly perturbed m. fields; • direct and nonmonotonic dependence of spectral indices on turbulence amplitude

  7. Numerical modeling of the turbulent magnetic field • pitch-angle diffusion model • Dq, Dtscatt scattering parameters • ``realistic´´ magnetic field− integration of particle equations of motion • All the mentioned studies were limited to test particle approach and • apply simplified models for the turbulent MHD medium near the shock. • In particular they neglect: • presence of long wave perturbations (mean field) • continuity of magnetic field across the shock – • correlations in particle motion on both sides of the shock. J. N., M. Ostrowski 2004, ApJ 610, 851 Monte Carlo modeling of the acceleration process by integrating particle equations of motion in turbulent magnetic field near the shock

  8. ``Realistic´´ magnetic field structureNiemiec & Ostrowski (2004, 2005) Upstream magnetic field: • uniform component + finite-amplitude • perturbations (superposition of sinusoidal • static waves – no Fermi II acceleration) • perturbations in the wide wavevector range • downstream structure: compressed upstream field • continuity of magnetic field lines across the shock

  9. Subluminal shocks mildly relativistic shock velocity (g1=1.2, uB,1=0.71c) • non power-law spectrum in the full energy range • (due to limited dynamic range of magnetic field perturbations – scattering • conditions vary with particle energy) • wide range of spectral indices • cut-offs due to lack of magnetic turbulence at relevant scales

  10. Superluminal shocks mildly relativistic shock velocity (g1=2.3, uB,1=1.27c) • ``superadiabatic´´ compression of injected particles for low turbulence • amplitudedB/B0,1=0.3(Begelman & Kirk, 1990) • power-law sections in the spectra form at larger perturbation amplitudes • (due to locally subluminal field configurations and respective magnetic • field compressions formed at the shock by long-wave perturbations) • steepening and cut-off occur in the resonance energy range

  11. Ultrarelativistic (high-g) shocks Bednarz & Ostrowski (1998) s = 2.2 • asymptotic spectral index (g1 » 1) (?) f(p) ~ p-a (N(E) ~ E –s ) a = 4.2(s = 2.2) σ Achterberg, Bednarz, Gallant, Guthmann Kirk, Ostrowski, Pelletier, Vietri, et al. • For oblique shocks: • requires strong turbulence downstream • Ostrowski & Bednarz (2002) • for medium turbulence amplitude and • g1 ~ 10-100much steeper particle spectra • Bednarz & Ostrowski (1998) Shock Lorentz factor

  12. Present approach:Superluminal high-g shock waves • ``superadiabatic´´ particle compression is the main acceleration process • small fraction of particles forms energetic spectral tails for large-amplitude • magnetic field perturbations • strong dependence on F(k) • non–power-law spectral form • cut-offs in the spectra occur within resonance energy range Niemiec & Ostrowski (astro-ph/0510811)

  13. For all configurations uB,1~1.4c • the cut-off energy decreases with growing shock Lorentz factor g1

  14. Particle transport near an ultrarelativistic shock wave • downstream magnetic field structure • B||,2 = B||,1 • B,2 = r B,1compression of tangential field components • compression factor: r = R g1/g2 (R ≈ 3) • highly anisotropic downstrean particle diffusion: • diffusion coefficient along shock normalk||« k • Downstream magnetic field structure becomes effectively 2D, perpendicular to the shock normal. Due to inefficient cross-field diffusion, advection of particles with the general downstream flow leads to high particle escape rates, which results in steep particle spectra. • large-amplitude long-waveperturbations can formlocally subluminalconditions at the shock leading to more efficient particle acceleration (Kolmogorov turbulence)

  15. Parallel high-g shock waves • processes of particle acceleration are inefficient for larger amplitudes of magnetic • field perturbations: • compression produces effectively perpendicular shock configuration • and features analogous to those observed in superluminal shocks are recovered

  16. in conditions of weakly perturbed magnetic fields particle spectra formed in the • wide energy range: • power-law parts of the spectra are flat(due to the presence of long-wave perturbations forming locally oblique field configuratuins at the shock and enabling, e.g., efficient particle reflections from the shock; Niemiec & Ostrowski (2004)) − particle spectral indices deviate from the results of the small-angle (or ``direction angle´´) scattering models suggesting the existence of the so-called universal spectral index a~4.2 for ultrarelativistic shocks • particle spectra are non power-law in the full energy range − • effects of the limited wavevector range for magnetic field turbulence • the critical turbulence amplitude allowing for efficient particle acceleration at • parallel shocks is reduced with increasing shock Lorentz factor g1 ultrarelativistic shocks are inefficient in high-energy particle production via the first-order Fermi mechanism unless additional source of turbu- lence exists and is able to decorrelate particle motion in the structured field near the shock

  17. Shock generated magnetic field turbulence PIC simulations by Frederiksen et al. 2004 • relativistic shock generates • strong small-scale turbulent • magnetic field downstream by • relativistic two-streaminstability • Medvedev & Loeb (1999), Silva et al. (2003), Nishikawa et al. (2003, 04), Frederiksen et al. (2004) shock front • short-wave magnetic field structure is 2D, • transversal to the shock normal, but in the • nonlinear regime the perturbations should • transform intoisotropic 3D turbulence. • small-scale large-amplitude fluctuations may • provide efficient particle scattering, which • possibly leads to decorrelation between • particle motion and the compressed field • downstream of the shock power in transverse B

  18. Modeling short-wave (Weibel-like) turbulence downstream Niemiec & Ostrowski (2006) in preparation • analytic model for 3D Weibel-like turbulent component downstream • of the shock (superposition of large-amplitude sinusoidal static waves with flat • power spectrum in the wavevector range (10 kmaxr, 100 kmaxr), where r=Rg1/g2) • short-wave turbulence imposed on the compressed downstream field • influence of such perturbations on particle trajectories is included as a small-amplitude momentum scattering term, with scattering probability distributions determined by a pattern of the turbulence assumed • how the existence of short-wave turbulence with various amplitudes • affects particle spectra formation in high-g shocks presented above? • what are conditions allowing for a “universal” spectral index?

  19. Superluminal shocks with short-wave perturbations downstream (preliminary results) • for energy densities in short-wave turbulence much larger than the energy density • in the compressed downstream magnetic field energetic particle spectral tails • are formed • non–power-law spectral form (continuous steepening) • similar spectral shape for different dB/B0,1, F(k) (and g1)

  20. Superluminal shocks with short-wave perturbations downstream (preliminary results) • for energy densities in short-wave turbulence much larger than the energy density • in the compressed downstream magnetic field energetic particle spectral tails • are formed • non–power-law spectral form (continuous steepening) • similar spectral shape for different dB/B0,1, F(k) (and g1)

  21. Superluminal shocks with short-wave perturbations downstream (preliminary results) • for energy densities in short-wave turbulence much larger than the energy density • in the compressed downstream magnetic field energetic particle spectral tails • are formed • non–power-law spectral form (continuous steepening) • similar spectral shape for different dB/B0,1, F(k) (and g1) • efficiency of particle scattering (scatt. angle DW)due to small-scale perturbations • decreases with particle energy: dBsh/‹B2› must be extremely large to decorrelate • motion of high-energy particles from the compressed field downstream of the shock

  22. Parallel shocks with short-wave perturbations downstream(preliminary results) model with particle pitch-angle scattering upstream of the shock, which does not include the effects of long-wave magnetic field perturbations. • for larger amplitudes of the compressed field (dB/B0,1) spectra qualitatively • similar to those formed at superluminal shocks • particle spectral index deviates from the ``universal‘‘ value a=4.2even • in the limit of dBsh/‹B2› » 1 • (long-wave) magnetic field structure upstream of the shock influences particle • acceleration processes; only in the model with pitch-angle scattering upstream, • particle spectrum with the ``universal‘‘ spectral index forms

  23. Summary • I-order Fermi process at high-g shocks is inefficient in particle • acceleration to high energies • particle spectra substantially depend on the form of the magnetic turbulence near the shock; spectral indices depart significantly from a=4.2 value • for the same background conditions, shocks with larger g produce steeper spectra with lower cut-off energies • ``universal“ spectral index requires special conditions (strong particle scattering downstream and upstream of the shock) The role of the I-order Fermi process on the observational properties of astrophysical sources hosting relativistic shocks requires serious reanalysis • UHECRs production and GRB afterglow spectra? • II-order Fermi process (Virtanen & Vainio 2005) • other acceleration processes (e.g. Hoshino et. al 1992, Hededal et al. 2004) Further progress requires: • observational results • numerical simulations (PIC simulations (magnetic field turbulence generation & particle injection) – background conditions for Monte Carlo methods)

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